US politician arrested for plotting attack on Muslims

A former candidate for the the US House of Representatives arrested on charges relating to his intention to damage religious property, violate civil rights and making threats through interstate communications, according to US news site Heavy, according to a report publish in The Journal.

Robert R. Doggart, 63, has admitted to plotting an attack on a Muslim community in New York. He made incriminating statements while in conversation with an FBI informant. He said that, he intended to go to an area near Hancock, New York known as Islamberg, and burn down its mosque, school and cafeteria.

Doggart had run for US Congress last year as an independent candidate for Tennessee’s fourth district. He came third in the election after the local Republican and Democratic candidates.

Plan of attack

Doggart’s plan had not specifically focused on targeting residents, but he had said in a tapped conversation that he understood, “that if it’s necessary to die then that’s a good way to die” – speaking about the potential for armed engagement.

He had intended to carry out the action with the assistance of others he had been in contact with who would make up a small militia.
In a phone conversation tapped by the FBI, Doggart said to a ‘cooperating source’ that, “those guys [have] to be killed. Their buildings need to be burnt down. If we can get in there and do that not losing a man, even the better.”

It also says in his plea deal that he had intended to transport weapons, including bringing various firearms and a machete, to New York to carry out the attack.

After his arrest he pleaded guilty to interstate communication of threats as part of a plea deal, although this has not yet been signed off on by the judge.
In the plea agreement, it is stated that the former congressional candidate justified the attack by theorising that the residents Islamberg were planning a terrorist attack.